Finding Peaks

Reclaiming Your Identity


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Episode 53
Reclaiming Your Identity
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Description

How do you define who you are? Have you ever felt like you’ve lost yourself? In this episode, we are joined by yet another amazing staff member, Madeline Frey, MS, LPCC, to dive into how we help our clients rediscover who they are and what steps to take.

Talking Points
  1. Starting with an example of ways exercise helps with the self-rediscovery process
  2. Going over favorite parts of Identity and Purpose Week in the Peak Recovery Curriculum 
  3. How to get out of the quicksand-nature of shame
  4. How to forgive your past self
  5. Quotes
    “He was so genuine and so relieved, and had such a clear picture of who he was. You can’t help but be inspired by that. It is such a cool thing to be a part of.”
    -Madeline Frey, MS, LPCC, Primary Therapist
    Episode Transcripts
    Episode 53 Transcripts

    empathy is knowing your own darkness

    without that connection you don’t have

    anything what’s the opposite of

    addiction just freedom

    hey everybody and welcome to another

    amazing episode of finding peaks you

    have yours truly chris burns grateful

    recovering president and founder

    we have our chief clinical officer um my

    right-hand man jason friesman licensed

    professional counselor and we have

    madeline frye

    no license prevail licensed professional

    counselor as well that is the first time

    i actually got her last name right um

    she corrected me today so now i’m how

    were you saying it fray frame yeah yeah

    it looks like free kind of reads that

    way yeah

    yeah it does

    but we are so excited to bring to you um

    another topic within our curriculum

    we’re going to be talking about identity

    and purpose but i wanted to jump into

    something i think really meaningful

    before we get into that and

    i had both of these individuals

    in my gym this morning in the pain cave

    we were talking a little bit about

    before the show kind of getting a sweat

    in before breakfast and more

    specifically doing that in the midst of

    connection and kind of what that does

    for our mental health what it does for

    our clarity and what i was talking to

    the guys about this morning in circle

    was like i need to foster that greatness

    so that i can share it with you all i

    can’t get to work and expect myself to

    to get to a place where i can extend

    these emotional opportunities or extend

    these connective opportunities if i

    don’t take great care of myself and i

    kind of like in those morning routines

    to kind of put that that uh oxygen mask

    on first before we go and do it for the

    people that we love and cherish within

    the program and so i just wanted to chat

    with you a little bit about your routine

    in the morning and how it allows you and

    enables you to show up as

    a good professional but an even better

    human

    yeah yeah

    um yeah i think for me in particular um

    i

    have my own journey that i’ve walked

    with anxiety and it it’s been really

    important for me to to realize and to

    hone in that one of the things that

    helps me the most is physical activity

    and and that can have a lot of different

    forms i

    have kind of narrowed it down to really

    liking um like weightlifting and cardio

    stuff like crossfit specifically and and

    i just found that if i if i do that i

    feel more in tune with my body

    i feel more in tune with my routine

    it it helps me just feel like i’m on the

    right path for the day

    it’s also really important for me to

    know how i’m doing so if i’m exhausted

    or if i have a late night if i have a

    lot going on it’s important for me to

    have flexibility in that that i know

    it’s okay if i sleep in i know that it’s

    fine if it’s not perfectly in the

    routine and just having like that

    flexibility and grace that i can offer

    myself but um it’s just it’s a great

    thing for me to be able to incorporate

    and i found that it does help a lot as

    far as just mental health and well-being

    goes yeah that’s huge you actually bring

    up a really interesting point you like

    get to

    you get to know yourself that day and

    that workout and where you’re at yeah

    because the workout will be really

    honest with you especially if you’re

    being dishonest with yourself

    and i love that getting under a bar but

    i’ll be like wow i don’t

    have what i had yesterday and i can be a

    little bit more mindful and maybe enact

    some self-compassion and i don’t have to

    be shot out of a cannon

    because that tends to be

    counterproductive that’s really cool

    i’ve actually never heard it explained

    that way

    i want to ask you guys so you guys work

    out with our clients

    uh often in crossfit gym and all that

    how yeah how do you see that helping the

    people at peaks

    oh man i can think of a specific story

    where there’s a

    girl that had been

    just walking through a variety of

    substance use issues she had a variety

    of mental health concerns and she was so

    ready to commit and just wanted to be

    well and so she showed up with this

    attitude of i’m just going to try

    whatever is put in front of me and she

    walked into the crossfit gym for the

    first time and i think her eyes were as

    big as dinner plates and she was like

    this place looks terrifying

    and she was like maddie please don’t

    make me do this and i was like we’re

    just gonna do it together right we’re

    just gonna take it one step at a time

    and she walked out and she was like

    that was weird and really hard but i did

    it and and then i realized that just

    because it looks scary doesn’t mean i

    can’t do it and then she ended up

    talking about ways that she could

    incorporate similar types of activities

    after she discharged

    and she’s still doing really well and so

    it’s just it’s really cool to see people

    using it as a platform to challenge

    themselves in a way that they haven’t

    before um and that’s really fun to kind

    of just be a part of and kind of get to

    say like we’ll do it together that’s

    exceptional i actually think i know who

    you’re talking about yeah it’s really

    really cool and to watch those lights

    turn off and watch them integrate it

    into their community i guess the best

    story i can come up with is we had a

    male client who showed up to us in a

    walker

    um and he came in in a walker and he

    couldn’t walk and he’s dragging his

    right foot and he’s got a tremendous

    alcohol detox to walk through and i

    remember i sat with him at crossfit and

    we just sat over in the corner of the

    bench he couldn’t even he couldn’t even

    sit up he had to sit against the wall

    and i said man we’re gonna get over

    there he’s like i’ll never make it over

    there and i said absolutely we will but

    we’re going to work on these arms and we

    did some curls and we just talked and we

    just shared space together we watched

    them work out he got a good arm pump in

    was nothing crazy and then after a few

    weeks of meeting me in there on a

    thursday i come in on a thursday i’m

    like

    yo where’s uh so-and-so and they’re like

    and i look over and he’s on a rower

    and he goes we got some things to talk

    about chris and i’m like oh my gosh man

    i went home i told my wife there’s this

    guy he’s overcoming adversity and then i

    get to go see him up in denver and he’s

    integrating that stuff he’s out hiking

    he’s going to phoenix multi-sport he’s

    connected with this physical side of

    which before he came to peaks and most

    certainly in his initial stages and

    peaks he thought was never

    possible

    and so i love how that physical activity

    wherever it’s at whoever it’s with it

    tends to turn on

    this side of my brain that says i can

    and turn off the side that i can’t but

    even more specifically

    i find it creates a lot of vulnerability

    and when we are able to get in that

    vulnerable space i think we can connect

    with whole hearts and really enact

    tremendous change

    even even when we were working out with

    jason the other day he got done doing a

    squat or maybe it was a shoulder press

    or something and he came out of it he

    said whoa

    i don’t know what came up there i’m just

    getting a little emotional i said give

    me a hug dude let’s go

    happens once a week

    and i just love that and for the viewers

    i think it’s important especially if

    you’re sitting back watching me i’m not

    going to do crossfit with maddie and

    chris that’s crazy yeah it’s not we meet

    everybody where they’re at sometimes we

    walk together sometimes we sit together

    at times we cry together and oh yeah we

    do this physical thing called crossfit

    occasionally as well but it’s

    the opportunity to engage in that is so

    much bigger than anything physical

    and that’s what i love about it and i

    think it mirrors this

    um

    a beautiful path that i see so many

    people have to go on just as far as

    recovery is in general by asking

    yourself what have i been doing up until

    this point that i’m willing to change

    and it’s

    it’s such a big ask and it’s so

    uncomfortable

    but i think one of the beautiful things

    that i’ve seen happen over and over and

    over again as people get to the point

    where they’re like

    let’s just try it let’s just see what

    happens and then when they do it it just

    creates this sense of self-efficacy

    where it’s like i can i can try

    something and i can accomplish something

    and just because it’s hard doesn’t mean

    i can’t um that’s that’s what courage is

    right like feeling afraid and doing it

    anyway

    um and there’s a guy in particular he um

    came in and was just really unfamiliar

    with all of this stuff and had some

    extra weight on him and he he was

    willing and he showed up and he just did

    these things all over um i mean

    repeatedly throughout the program and

    not only did he lose a lot of weight but

    what he was saying was

    now whenever i feel something whenever i

    have an emotion or i’m experiencing

    anxiety

    my body tells me and because i’m using

    it

    now i know how to respond to it or at

    least i have the opportunity to create

    space for myself to take care of myself

    and that’s really really cool you know

    we’ll we’ll do some mindfulness stuff

    for some

    breathing activities where you know

    we’ll like put our hand on a stomach and

    a hand on her heart and and feel what it

    feels like to breathe and just see the

    anxiety

    dispel from someone or

    they start feeling more grounded after

    that and it’s just a really cool process

    that we see that when someone is willing

    to engage and try something new and they

    start using their body their body

    actually gives them information

    and and they can use that as an

    emotional regulation and grounding skill

    um that doesn’t it’s not just when

    they’re working out it also goes into

    like the rest of their day as well and

    that comes up in session that comes up

    in conversations it’s um i don’t know

    it’s a beautiful thing and it’s fun to

    be a part of yeah yeah that’s really

    cool too and in an effort too in that

    direction is like then you once you

    identify and

    come to grips or become relational with

    your body then it’s something you can be

    safe inside as well

    which is really really cool to watch

    that grow

    so thank you for that

    so the topic today is actually identity

    and purpose and i think it’s a great

    dovetail off of this crossfit as well

    because

    often times i’m in there when i’m

    cheerleading everybody and check it out

    if you come to peaks you’ve never had a

    cheerleader like me

    but never

    unless you went to a m they got really

    good male cheerleaders

    they’re pretty strong

    yeah but

    i go in there and i say and i’m

    screaming at the top of my lungs i said

    i know it doesn’t say on our website but

    you’re going to come here and be a

    better athlete too

    we didn’t read it

    i watched my language

    we didn’t read it in the small print but

    you’re going to be a better athlete and

    i look at some of these especially

    mature adults who come in and don’t

    think they would ever be in a ladder

    drill and then they come through and

    just watching them light up when i say

    that because what i see behind their

    eyes is a sense of purpose a sense of

    belonging a sense of feeling a part of

    which has been a big part of my identity

    and recovery is feeling a part of this

    group

    and being a person in long-term recovery

    from a mental health disorder which i

    used to use substances to cope so i want

    to

    throw it over to you we’re actually in

    the midst of identity and purpose and

    discussing a lot of this but

    maddie if you would what are some of

    your

    favorite components in that week and

    what does it look like yeah um so i’ve

    been working with the women specifically

    this week on identity and purpose and

    the curriculum as we’ve built it has a

    variety of tools and theories that we

    kind of weave in

    just to help people gain insight into

    some of the things that make them who

    they are and i think one of the things

    that um

    we see consistently is that when

    someone’s in the midst of their

    addiction or when someone’s in the midst

    of

    working through mental health concerns

    they start to believe that that’s the

    the substance of their identity right

    that that is the thing that makes up who

    they are and and they and they lose

    sight of that they um

    it it just becomes something that

    they’re not super clear on anymore and

    so um so for example you know we worked

    through um this thing called enneagram

    this week and it’s just a thing that

    helps people understand more of their

    personality based on basic fears and

    basic desires and so we engaged with

    that

    and then incorporated

    what’s called eric erickson’s theory of

    psychosocial development which looks at

    stages of life and certain virtues that

    are developed

    as someone goes through like conflicts

    so say the conflict is between

    intimacy or isolation in your early

    adulthood

    people resolve that conflict by engaging

    in meaningful relationships

    and then they consider what happens if

    you know you go through a variety of

    unsuccessful relationships or feel

    discouraged

    and we also talk about something called

    maslow’s hierarchy of needs

    and basically what all this is doing is

    putting things together that help people

    realize that

    there are contributing factors to um

    what they’re dealing with it’s not who

    they are

    these are the things that have come up

    or what they’ve been through or

    developmental ruptures that have

    happened

    it’s not it’s not who they are as a

    person and so we we inject some

    compassion and some grace for ourselves

    into how we think about who we are um

    that helps um negate that shame a little

    bit um and then we start talking about

    well if you’re not that then who are you

    and that’s when we start talking about

    values and we start talking about

    purpose and we start talking about

    envisioning a better world for

    themselves and where they get to be

    really specific about some of the things

    that they want to see if they are able

    to lean into their values and if they

    are able to have greater self-compassion

    and less shame

    so that’s kind of what we’ve been

    working on so far this week nice i love

    that to to come in and out and really

    create that iden i was just in group

    this morning with a mature adult and i

    said

    and i’ll ask this question often when i

    first meet people i say in your best

    guess

    why do you abuse substances with such

    intensity

    and a lot of times mature adults they’ll

    say i just you know i’ve just always

    been a drinker i’m a drinker i’ve always

    been an alcoholic i just like drinking

    my parents drank i drank and i’m just a

    drinker’s drinker

    and i’m like gosh to your point i just

    think you’re so much more than that you

    are so much more than that and i get to

    see these humans in front of me that

    have kind of consolidated their identity

    and their purpose to this tiny cup

    and it’s some of the saddest stuff that

    i get to see but one of the greatest

    things i get to see is when they pop out

    of a curriculum like identity and

    purpose and they’re like

    i have a real chance i’ve been able to

    formulate something that can be

    sustainable and really intentional and

    it kind of redescribes

    who i am

    right it probably pulls away from that

    negative self-talk as well at the same

    time

    well i think you know when we were

    developing the curriculum um

    i was i was hearkening back to uh like

    clients

    i used to talk in group about like hey

    the the removal of the cup that you just

    said of of substance use

    and maybe other mental health stuff like

    you remove that cup

    and you’re left with this beautiful

    blank canvas like you can begin to build

    your life on there

    and i had i would frame it in a way that

    it was this exciting thing that like you

    have all this opportunity

    and i remember looking in groups often

    and just seeing

    terror and fear of like i don’t know

    what’s left

    uh if i if i remove these substances or

    if i don’t if i’m not kind of crippled

    by my depression or anxiety or whatever

    i don’t

    i don’t know what is there

    and

    you know it kind of stemmed from there

    to be like you know what this isn’t just

    like one group like where we have a

    little chat about what to put on there

    like we have to have a we have to really

    do a deep dive on this to really help

    people

    find themselves

    and to your point chris you know like um

    it’s so critically important i think

    to move well beyond i’m an addict or i i

    am depressed i am these things what else

    are you i it it’s wide and it’s vast and

    um it’s nuanced and and maddie you

    mentioned the word shame i think people

    often get hung up on uh

    get stuck in that spot of like i’m never

    going to be better i’m never

    going to figure all these things out and

    i think you did a great job kind of

    talking about

    um how we kind of carefully walk people

    toward finding out more about themselves

    being curious about that

    and it’s kind of the removal of all of

    those things all of that shame and

    saying over here

    you know this is your personality this

    is where you got a little hung up in

    your past

    and then this is how you can begin to

    manage and walk through your fears and

    how you can begin to find and identify

    yourself and and be proud of who you are

    and you know because when people walk in

    um i i’ve told this story a few times

    like they do literally feel like they’re

    the worst people on the planet a lot of

    people walk in the peaks feeling like

    they’re the worst person on the planet

    on the planet and um that’s a lot to

    walk through especially as we remove the

    thing driving that shame um

    but also kind of creating an identity uh

    what’s left and how do we begin to build

    that

    yeah

    yeah i mean that that’s huge and we have

    these interesting parallels at peaks

    recovery too because you got someone

    coming in in their first week and

    someone leaving in their sixth and i had

    that parallel this morning in group and

    are in my circle and um one of the folks

    that was new in recovery he couldn’t

    help but define himself as that

    the person that was on his way out he’s

    like all i know is i can do everything

    in my life except for that

    you know and he’s like and i have all of

    this i got relationships i have a

    beautiful wife i got 10 and 11’s at

    night chris i got a coffee with you next

    week i just can’t wait i’m hanging with

    my wife here in colorado springs and it

    was just like you could see these

    parallels running and i get chills

    talking about it because that’s the hope

    and that person was able to turn to the

    person who left today i think was your

    client

    and go

    all right man i can see the light at the

    end of the tunnel this makes sense yeah

    you know um but i’ve been mired in and

    that took

    alcoholics anonymous 1935 i mean they

    were really

    giving people identity it was much

    different than it is now we’re trying to

    grow out of that alcoholic addict

    identity but it was brilliant yeah they

    brought these people in you said hey

    you’re not nobody you’re an alcoholic in

    long-term recovery and you help people

    and i can remember just what that energy

    felt like to be helpful

    to anyone for anything for any reason

    and when you enact some identity and

    give people a little bit of purpose and

    allow them to and that’s what i love the

    way we do it we allow them to define

    that

    um it can really turn those lights on

    pretty clearly

    um well i think

    there are constraints to the alcoholics

    anonymous approach because like you kind

    of still have to keep the cup central

    yep

    and i think i think we find that it’s

    helpful to acknowledge the cup and and

    own that cup

    but don’t own a lot of other things

    beyond that cup as well not just the cup

    yeah most definitely and we’re

    understanding now it is all about mental

    health yeah

    but it was brilliant for

    that time

    yeah absolutely innovative for sure yeah

    especially some of the concepts too that

    kind of match today like they don’t call

    it shame yeah right they call it self

    yeah or whatever it might be you know so

    yeah and it was cool um talking with him

    on his way out and

    and he said

    it feels it feels strange and unfamiliar

    but i’m proud of myself

    and it was it was really cool talking to

    him because you could see that he was

    holding on to some emotion yeah and i

    was like

    can you say that again

    yeah

    he was like

    i’m proud of myself and he’s like maddie

    you’re not gonna make me cry my last day

    i was like you already are yeah

    damn it i love

    because he was he was so genuine and so

    relieved and had such a clear picture of

    who he was

    and you can’t help but be inspired by

    that it’s just such a cool thing to be a

    part of it really is

    we see it a lot too with mature adults

    who have had some successes you know had

    a career had a college degree and then

    you know find themselves coping with

    substances in their late 30s or early

    you see that identity just get

    completely discombobulated and they just

    don’t think they can get it back

    specifically the client you’re speaking

    about when he came in i mean it was just

    hopeless

    and

    it’s a long fall when you built an

    identity

    you know some it’s easier for people

    that are 17 18 19 years old they haven’t

    built as much of an identity but if you

    built a career in a family and all those

    things are now

    uh in jeopardy or you’re feeling awful

    about it like that’s a that’s a big fall

    it’s really tough yeah you see it

    sometimes with young people as well

    especially

    athletes in school you know for me i

    i didn’t grow up with anything other

    than i’m either an addict and i do all

    this horrific this bad stuff or i’m this

    athlete sometimes too and that was nice

    you know and that was a breath of fresh

    air and um i didn’t play college sports

    or even close but i remember leaving

    high school and i’m like

    i’m not

    a basketball player anymore and don’t

    play football i’m not getting paid for

    this who am i and i remember turning

    very intentionally and energetically and

    being like you’re this bad person

    you know and so i see it with young

    people as well and it might be sport it

    could be church it could be community

    something that was here today and kind

    of shifted tomorrow

    i see that be pretty detrimental for

    young people as well

    and it’s helpful giving people two

    options

    of different ways to think about

    themselves because i think what you’re

    exactly to your point right you had

    basketball player and you had

    a bad person right and and because one

    was gone you were able to then just

    really focus on the other

    and i think it’s helpful just for people

    to have the book open in front of them

    and say i can identify um in this realm

    in this realm you know my hobbies my

    interests my values my passions my

    relationships and have all these

    different ways to think about themselves

    that gives them a deeper sense of

    purpose and a deeper sense of relating

    to the world in a meaningful way

    what do you real quick and i know we

    don’t have a lot of time left but that’s

    brilliant and just brings up another how

    do you get people out of that how do you

    do you

    i try i find myself explaining kind of

    these rudiment these rooted kind of

    foundational stuff within our

    developmental process but how do you get

    people out of their shame

    with this stuff do you explain hey a lot

    of this stuff is in the past or i mean

    can you explain that a little bit for

    the viewers

    um

    i

    i mean obviously shame is sticky like it

    is probably one of the um

    feelings that just trips people up the

    most and everyone feels it um it’s such

    a universal feeling but it’s the thing

    that leads to disconnection because

    shame is the the feeling that that

    leaves you feeling small and not worthy

    of connection um and

    and i think on the road to addressing

    shame um

    it’s

    it’s so important and one of the things

    that i try to help my clients focus on

    is

    in the thing that you don’t want to

    connect over and the thing that you

    don’t want people to know

    what is one small aspect that you can

    find compassion for just one teeny tiny

    aspect and even if it’s

    not excusing something or making sense

    of it or writing it off is not a big

    deal can you at least turn to yourself

    and say that must have been so hard for

    you

    to go through something like that or to

    feel so isolated or feel so alone

    finding some way to humanize it i think

    gives people a fighting chance to then

    dismantle it a little bit further but

    it’s tough it comes up over and over and

    over again and it evolves and it finds

    new ways to come up and attack

    everyone um so it’s definitely an

    ongoing conversation but i i would say

    probably start there yeah

    that’s a great way to explain how about

    you jay yeah i was just going to add i

    think you answered that brilliantly but

    i think

    you know the piece i add too is i

    i think a lot of times things happen to

    us when we’re kids

    and then we feel shame about it and then

    we we look back with our adult brain and

    and we’re like why didn’t why wasn’t i

    smarter why didn’t i do this or why

    didn’t i do that

    and we take our adult brain and then

    judge ourselves for like why didn’t i

    act like an adult when i was five or six

    why didn’t i protect myself why didn’t i

    stand up for myself why did i allow this

    to happen why did i do all those things

    so finding that compassion

    i mean i’ve had

    people get pictures of themselves from

    when they were kids to be like you

    expected this little kid or i’ll you

    know just i’ll paint a picture of like

    you know a five-year-old is this tall

    and they weigh

    you know not very much and uh and they

    should be worried about their abcs and

    uh

    and numbers and

    learning how to share and be nice and

    you were enduring this whole other thing

    like i sometimes i can verbally paint

    the picture in a way that hopefully can

    build some compassion

    um because it is that shame is just that

    self-judgment of like

    something is fundamentally wrong with me

    and often like it’s just amazing how

    much of that we just carry from our

    childhood usually and and finding some

    compassion for

    to acknowledge like i was actually doing

    the best i could yeah

    yeah and the reason i ask is i get it a

    lot in my circle i sit with guys who are

    you know um have been to multiple i had

    multiple treatment episodes and i’ll say

    you know things like you know this stuff

    is informed and they’ll say look at all

    the terrible stuff i’ve done

    look at that

    and i’m like it’s it’s informed by

    something yeah and you guys say that a

    lot better than i do somebody steal that

    [Laughter]

    but it is it’s just like can i offer can

    i get you to speak to a compassionate

    component even just a sliver just one

    tiny shift in the opposite direction

    because asking someone to just

    completely dismantle their shame is

    is frankly too big of an ask straight

    out of the gate

    because i think shame actually serves as

    protection if shame keeps you small

    it keeps you disengaged there’s a chance

    that maybe you won’t get hurt or you

    won’t feel embarrassed or guilty again

    and so if it keeps you small it actually

    serves a function and we have to honor

    that first but there’s a part that we

    have to set aside and say and you’re

    also keeping me from connecting maybe to

    the full existence extent that i could

    um

    so what’s human about that what can i

    connect to where’s the compassion yeah i

    love that and that’s why in 2022 and

    this will be for another episode

    why the 12-step model doesn’t work quite

    as well today because it actually keeps

    us a little bit smaller than i think we

    need to be and that’s a tough place to

    be

    so well thank you all for coming on this

    has been absolutely amazing very

    educational for me

    everybody’s glad they got to watch you

    uh have an educational experience no

    it’s good but i hope it was just as

    amazing for everybody else thank you

    guys for coming on it’s been phenomenal

    um you know what time it is chris burns

    bringing on

    good pro great professionals but even

    better humans yeah that’s what we do

    please find us next time uh sunday at 6

    p.m is when we jump on

    but you can find us on spotify i’ve

    heard um instagram tick tock i’m the

    brand ambassador we had

    we are moving on up organically viral

    we’re going by

    check

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    Finding PeaksBy Peaks Recovery Centers

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